I Learned It By Watching You, Jon!


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State Rep. Jon Brien blames his recent defeat on “outside influences” – my union among them – who were “spending a lot of money” against him. Here’s why he is partly right, partly wrong, and partly to blame.


Last week, I filed several independent expenditure reports with the RI Board of Elections on behalf of my organization, SEIU District 1199NE — the union representing nearly 4,000 private-sector health care workers throughout Rhode Island. The reports detailed our spending in support of four candidates in this past Tuesday’s primary elections.

Among them was an expenditure of $834.57 for a mailing sent to frequent primary voters in Woonsocket’s House District 50, critical of State Rep. Jon Brien’s sponsorship of legislation paving the way for the disastrous 38 Studios deal. This expense was so small that it wasn’t even required to be reported under the state’s new disclosure law. According to some reports, however, it may have had a big impact on the race — where Brien lost by 50 votes to first-time candidate and city firefighter Stephen Casey.

In my opinion, there were many reasons to vote against Rep. Brien. I don’t know the man personally, but most of his views are the exact opposite of mine (except perhaps for our mutual admiration for the roast beef sandwiches at the Beef Barn). He often seemed more focused on building his profile with business interests, ALEC and the right-leaning Washington think-tank crowd than with actually helping the people of Woonsocket.

For example, Brien did little to help during my union’s recent fight to restore $24 million in funding that had been cut from programs serving the developmentally disabled — despite the importance of agencies like Seven Hills of Rhode Island to many families in Northern RI. Meanwhile, he adamantly supported costly tax breaks that only benefit the wealthy – embracing the failed & disproven “trickle-down” theory of economic growth, depriving our state of revenue that could have more than restored the cuts to these vital services, and condemning direct care support staff to a life of poverty.

But the 38 Studios debacle (and the mindset that brought it into being) stood out as an event that deeply angered everyone across the state, regardless of their political leanings. Rep. Brien was one of three sponsors whose names appeared on the law that enabled the EDC to loan $75 million to Curt Schilling’s risky video game company, but left Rhode Islanders on the hook when it failed.1

Brien claimed that the wool had been pulled over his eyes, that he was sold a bill of goods, and that he didn’t know that all of the funds would be poured into one company – but it appears these excuses simply weren’t good enough for most voters, who decided it was time for a little Reckoning of their own.

There were other factors, of course – and you won’t find me claiming that one postcard could magically beat a 3-term State Representative from a political family with deep roots in the city. From what I’ve read, it appears that Stephen Casey related well to many voters. On election night, he told the Valley Breeze that he had knocked on over 900 doors. That’s the kind of hard work that wins elections – but it didn’t stop Rep. Brien from crying foul:

“I worked really hard and I think I represented the district well,” said Brien. “I think that the outside influences from out-of-town, spending a lot of money on these races, worked really hard to target certain people. That’s the nature of the beast. I was targeted by many of the labor unions from around the state.”

What Brien fails to mention (because his venom sac runneth over when it comes to workers’ organizations) is that my union was vastly outspent by a corporate-backed alliance that dropped just over $11,225 in a failed attempt to protect him. That’s more money than even Rep. Brien’s own campaign could raise and spend.

As Ted Nesi noted, this group — the 50CAN Action Fund2 — received $160,500 from Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire Mayor of New York City, and $50,000 from Jonathan Sackler, an heir & executive at Purdue Pharma (the maker of OxyContin) in addition to $2,500 from one Rhode Islander, Angus Davis. So we have a situation where three wealthy individuals (but let’s be honest, it was mostly the non-Rhode Islanders3) spent more money on the outcome of one Woonsocket general assembly primary election than the nurses, CNAs, and other health care workers who belong to our union.

Unlike these donors, our members live and work in the Ocean State, and have a real stake in Rhode Island’s future. In House District 50, this group outspent us by nearly a 14-to-1 margin4 — so it seems to me that Rep. Brien’s real complaint should be that his rich independent benefactors weren’t particularly smart at directing their investments — an ultimate irony, of course, for these illustrious captains of finance.

But if it’s any solace to those who truly object to the interventions that my organization and others made in the recent election, let me say this: so do I.

Unfortunately for us all, the Supreme Court’s “Citizens United” decision has opened the floodgates for unlimited spending by corporations, wealthy individuals, and unions – though most observers acknowledge that workers’ organizations don’t have pockets nearly as deep as the CEOs. Independent expenditures didn’t begin with “Citizens’ United,” but the decision has paved the way for untold sums of money to be dumped into our local, state, and federal elections.

If we abandon one of our most important founding principles as a country — a government of, by, and for the people — the very future of our democracy is at stake. For our part, SEIU believes that the Supreme Court decision should be immediately overturned, and that laws must be passed to ensure that the voices of ordinary Americans are not drowned out by the wealthy and corporations in our political process.

In the meantime, however, our members will not unilaterally disarm. We’ll be in the trenches, working to stop politicians who believe that corporations are people, and who are eager to do the bidding of the wealthiest 1% — those who are growing ever-richer while the standard of living for the vast majority of Americans continues to decline, and who seek to further dominate the political process, distort our democratic institutions, and turn our government into an auction house.

Our union believes that we need to build a movement of all Americans across political and party lines to make sure that the voices of ordinary people will be heard in our democracy, today and always. With that, I’ll offer two parting thoughts for Rep. Brien, if he is genuinely concerned about the influence of money in politics, and not just at the times when it doesn’t work out for him personally:

First, if ALEC still keeps you on their board after voters have shown you the door, maybe you can parlay your current misfortune into convincing the Koch Brothers, ExxonMobil, and the other CEOs and corporations to change ALEC’s position on unlimited corporate spending on elections.5 As John Nichols described it last year in the Nation:

[ALEC] has no problem with policies that increase the likelihood that the candidate with the most money and corporate support will prevail. Its 2009 Resolution Supporting Citizen Involvement in Elections bluntly “opposes all efforst to limit [citizen] involvement by limiting campaign contributions.” A resolution approved [in 2010] expresses support for the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling.

Second, if that doesn’t work out (my prediction: it won’t), I’m willing to bet that Common Cause would let you join as a member and stand with them to work for fair elections and stronger rules governing the influence of money in politics.

Heck, if you are able to kiss and make up with their director, I’ll even pay the $40 for your membership! The only issue would be that Rhode Island’s ethics code prohibits gifts of more than $25 to a member of the general assembly.

So can you remind me: when is your last official day in office?


Footnotes:

(1) Now-retired State Rep. Bob Watson was the lone ‘NO’ vote on the deal – which you can either credit to his powers of legislative discerment, or to the fact that he was a constant contrarian on just about everything at the General Assembly, so eventually he was bound to really get one right!


(2) The group, which purports to stand for educational opportunities for poor children in urban schools, boggled many minds when it gave Brien an “A+” grade, given his intense opposition to our state’s DREAMers who simply wanted to be able to afford to go to college after they graduate high school, and whose only “offense” was being undocumented because they were brought here at a young age.


(3) Given their out-of-state base, it’s no wonder 50CAN got geographically confused with a couple of their mailers. If they had heard about Casey’s beer and dynamite fundraiser, we may have even seen an attack mailer accusing him of mixing alcohol with explosives.


(4) There were other unions that reported conducting Independent Expenditures in HD-50 – their reports showed $18,000 and $5,000 spread over 25 races (an averge of $920 per race). Even if twice the average had been spent going after Rep. Brien (I highly doubt it – voting history shows that this is a fairly low-turnout district), all of the union money combined against Rep. Brien still would have been four times less than the corporate money supporting him.


(5) You can read ALEC’s resolutions from both before and after the Citizens United decision, though you’ll have to filter through the cluttered layout of the critique (apologies, but those were the only versions I could find on-line – strangely enough, ALEC appears to have removed the originals from its own website).

Jon Brien: Personal Friend and Political Adversary


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Reps Lisa Baldelli-Hunt and Jon Brien explain to reporters at the State House why they didn’t support a property tax increase for Woonsocket. (Photo by Bob Plain)

I’m probably the only progressive in Rhode Island who didn’t break out in celebration upon learning that ultra-conservative Woonsocket state Rep. Jon Brien had been knocked out of his State House seat in Tuesday’s primary.

Not that progressives don’t have good reason to celebrate his political demise; they do. Though Brien calls himself a Democrat, in practice he’s one of the most conservative members of the General Assembly. On socially issues he falls to the right of even his Republican colleagues and on fiscal policy he’s simply draconian. He’s both a Catholic, and an Ayn Rand acolyte – a toxic combination to the left.

He refers to himself as the “godfather of voter ID in Rhode Island,” but he might be best known for being on the board of directors of ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council, a shadowy, business-backed political operation that pairs corporate leaders with state legislators to write and hopefully export conservative legislation.

He also attracted a lot of attention when he and his cohort Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt killed a property-tax bill that was supported by both the mayor and city council – not to mention almost every member of the legislative and executive branches of government.

I’ll always remember him as the guy who almost got into a fight in an elevator with a union official, being as that was our first proper introduction to each other.

As you can see, there are no shortage of reasons for progressives and liberals (and even maybe middle-of-the-road moderates) to fear and/or detest his radically conservative agenda.

Me, on the other hand, the aforementioned fiascoes can also be seen as a list of many of my favorite stories to report over the last year or so. Jon Brien was like job security for me, I could always count on him necessitating some editorial coverage. I feel a little bit like an account who just lost tax season. Seriously, he’s driven a lot of traffic to RI Future. Our readers love to hate him and I truly enjoy reporting and writing about him.

But none of that is why I didn’t celebrate when I heard he lost his reelection bid.

I genuinely like Jon Brien, and consider him a friend. In fact, as I’ve mentioned before, my dad was once married to his cousin, so in a way, we’re family!

For those who don’t know Jon Brien, in addition to being a right-wing ideologue, he’s also  funny and personable and thoughtful. He can also be crude and irascible and pompous. With the notable exception of the right-wing ideologue part, all that sounds a lot like me, if I do say so myself.

And furthermore, he very rarely dodged an interview, which goes a long way with me. Not just because it makes my job easier, but also because I like when people stand up for what they believe in and Jon Brien certainly did a lot of that.

That said, I think his politics and his policy proposals are generally bad for Rhode Island and I think Woonsocket will be better served with someone different in office.

So here’s hoping my friend Jon Brien finds that silver lining in his electoral defeat … but here’s also hoping it leads him far away from the public sector.

Baldelli-Hunt, Brien Plead Dumb on 38 Studios Vote

The Cicilline-Gemma debate at Rhode Island College wasn’t the only question and answer session for candidates on Tuesday. In Woonsocket, constituents were invited to attend a candidate forum hosted by MyWoonsocket.com and WNRI radio to meet the candidates for General Assembly seats in the city.

Radio host Roger Bouchard moderated while local reporters Sandy Phaneuf of the Valley Breeze, Russ Olivo of the Woonsocket Call and Rob Borkowski of the Woonsocket Patch asked the questions.

While the candidates for Senate seats addressed the crowd first, the real fun began when the candidates for Representative came to the stage. Coming later in the questioning, Chris Roberts had the quote of the night when asked what he could get accomplished in the General Assembly as the only Republican running. “There are plenty of people in the the State House who are Republicans in hiding,” he replied while giving a slight glance back to the incumbents on the stage.

Rep. Baldelli-Hunt opened by stating she didn’t owe anyone anything, she was there as a watchdog and that you can’t spend what you don’t have. However, when she was called on her record later, she got very defensive about voting for the bill that authorized $75 million dollars for 38 Studios and the fact that she voted for tax breaks for the rich in 2010. More than once she complained that her opponent was misleading voters but her voting record is documented.

Michael Morin, her opponent in Rep. 49 admitted he would have voted for the supplemental tax bill if he had been in office because by not doing so, the members of the General Assembly, and especially those representing Woonsocket just kicked the can down the road and that he didn’t want Woonsocket to become another Central Falls, where the tax rate spiked to a 35 percent increase after they went into receivership. Despite Baldelli-Hunt’s protestations otherwise, Morin rightly pointed out that even if she never actually came out and advocated for bankruptcy for the city, her failure to act, along with the rest of the city’s delegation, led to a de facto course that would indeed lead to the city now being governed by a budget commission.

In the race for Rep. 50, Rep. Jon Brien pointed out the fact he championed the new Voter ID law and that he led the charge for pension reform but had to play defense on his role in co-sponsoring the 38 Studios legislation. His opponent, Steve Casey, pointed out that he would have worked to negotiate change rather than have pension change foisted upon employees and Morin jumped on the issue as well, stating that the mortality tables they used for firefighters were skewed, with legislators being led to believe the average life expectancy of a firefighter is 87 years old when in fact it is actually 72 years old.

Brien’s default position was that they needed “shared sacrifice” and that the taxpayers should be the last resort. Morin and Casey both jumped on that, saying that they should have worked over the course of the last two years to find $7.5 million in savings for the city. Roberts also jumped into the fray by stating that as a member of the school committee he’s been heavily involved in the budget commission hearings and that he’s not seen an elected Senator or Representative at any of the meetings. He even pointed out that the chairman of the commission has extended invitations to the General Assembly delegation from the city but none has taken him up on his offer to participate in discussions on the city’s future.

In a question about how they could bring more business into the city, Rep. Brien made a stunning statement that the city should do all it can to keep the right people while getting rid of the wrong people and that the first place to start would be to get rid of all the low income housing in the city.

Brien also stated later that Woonsocket, “was the Mill City,” and that they “should get back to their roots,” as he would work to enact legislation to get a waiver so the city could burn sludge in a waste to energy plant. There was no follow up on the question to ask Rep. Brien how that would lead to bettering the quality of life in the city.

Prior to the the House candidates, the candidates for the two Senate seats addressed the crowd. Roger Picard is unopposed and got two minutes to introduce himself and tell his constituents he’d be there if they needed him. After he left the stage to applause, the candidates for Senate seat 24 took the stage as incumbent Marc Cote and challenger Lew Pryeor answered questions.

Even as the newcomer, when asked, Pryeor was the one with quick answers, calling for more neighborhood participation, just like he organized in Warwick when he served on the City Council there. He stressed the need for involvement from the whole community and pushed for the formation of neighborhood associations that would build understanding. He offered that Fifth Avenue School could have been saved if the school department hadn’t hired two administrators for $200,000 but stated that since it was already done, he accepted it and would move forward.

Senator Cote, on the other hand, described his greatest achievements, among them being Woonsocket no longer being a toll call because of legislation he sponsored. He also touted his bill to alleviate taxes on businesses in the city. There was no follow up question about how that had worked out since there are many fewer businesses in Woonsocket since he sponsored that legislation.

In closing, Cote stated his opponent hadn’t made the case for change and that the voters should vote to keep things the same while Pryeor followed him by stating that after 18 years with the same man in office, nothing had really changed and that re-electing the same man would lead to no change.

While the candidates for Senate seats addressed the crowd first, the real fun began when the candidates for Representative came to the stage. Coming later in the questioning, Chris Roberts had the quote of the night when asked what he could get accomplished in the General Assembly as the only Republican running. “There are plenty of people in the the State House who are Republicans in hiding,” he replied while giving a slight glance back to the incumbents on the stage.

Rep. Baldelli-Hunt opened by stating she didn’t owe anyone anything, she was there as a watchdog and that you can’t spend what you don’t have. However, when she was called on her record later on, she got very defensive about voting for the bill that authorized $75 million dollars for 38 Studios and the fact that she voted for tax breaks for the rich in 2010. More than once she complained that her opponent was misleading voters but her voting record is documented.

Michael Morin, her opponent in Rep. 49 admitted he would have voted for the supplemental tax bill if he had been in office because by not doing so, the members of the General Assembly, and especially those representing Woonsocket just kicked the can down the road and that he didn’t want Woonsocket to become another Central Falls, where the tax rate spiked to a 35 percent increase after they went into receivership. Despite Baldelli-Hunt’s protestations otherwise, Morin rightly pointed out that even if she never actually came out and advocated for bankruptcy for the city, her failure to act, along with the rest of the city’s delegation, led to a de facto course that would indeed lead to the city now being governed by a budget commission.

In the race for Rep. 50, Rep. Jon Brien pointed out the fact he championed the new Voter ID law and that he led the charge for pension reform; reform that is now in question. His opponent, Steve Casey, pointed out that he would have worked to negotiate change rather than have it foisted upon them and Morin jumped into the fray as well, stating that the mortality tables they used for firefighters were skewed, with legislators being led to believe the average life expectancy of a firefighter is 87 years old when in fact it is actually 72 years old.

Brien’s default position was that they needed “shared sacrifice” and that the taxpayers should be the last resort. Morin and Casey both jumped on that, saying that they should have worked over the course of the last two years to find $7.5 million in savings for the city. Roberts also jumped into the fray by stating that as a member of the school committee he’s been heavily involved in the budget commission hearings and that he’s not seen an elected Senator or Representative at any of the meetings. He even pointed out that the chairman of the commission has extended invitations to the General Assembly delegation from the city but none has taken him up on his offer to participate in discussions on the city’s future.

In a question about how they could bring more business into the city, Rep. Brien made a stunning statement that the city should do all it can to keep the right people while getting rid of the wrong people and that the first place to start would be to get rid of all the low income housing in the city.

As for the production of the forum itself, it was very difficult to hear the questioners and Russ Olivo was barely audible. Several of the questions were duplicated and one from Rob Borkowski about accessibility was roundly criticized by several in the crowd as a softball. The questioners also did a disservice to the voters who attended by not asking Rep. Baldelli-Hunt if she would pledge to serve out the entire two year term and not run for mayor next year.

The one thing taken away from this forum is that incumbents Brien and Baldelli-Hunt cried foul over and over again and did so in very loud and accusatory tones while their opponents remained humble and stated fact. In the end it will all come down to if the assembled voters recognized the loud, bullying tactics of the experienced incumbents for what they were.

Menard Attends Fundraiser for Baldelli-Hunt Oppoent


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A scene from a fundraiser for Mike Morin, a Woonsocket fire fighter who is running against Lisa Baldelli-Hunt.

Recently I predicted that Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt won’t win her reelection campaign. One of the reasons I went out on this limb is the word on the street is that, among others, several sitting legislators aren’t interested in serving with her any more – including some pretty powerful ones.

That Rep. Rene Menard attended a fundraiser for Baldelli-Hunt’s primary challenger Mike Morin on Friday night might be one of the early signs of this dynamic playing out. Though Menard cautioned me not to read too much into it.

“I went as his friend,” Menard told me when I asked if he would be supporting Morin. The two served together on Woonsocket’s fire department for years. “The only race I am concerned with is my own.”

But he did draw an interesting distinction between real friends and political friends. “In politics, you make political friends and once you are no longer in politics they are no longer your friends. But Mike will be a friend long after either of us are involved in politics.”

Not sure if he considers Baldelli-Hunt a friend, or even a political acquaintance, but my guess would be he doesn’t.

Menard, who has a tough primary of his own against Cumberland Town Councilor Mia Ackerman, said he didn’t donate any money to Morin’s campaign.

Progress Report: The Geography of Shooting Sprees and the Politics of the Second Amendment; Veggie Medicine


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There are just too many unanswerable questions in the case of the Colorado theater shooting … one that I keep going back to is why did two of the deadliest shooting sprees in the nation’s history happen so close to each other. Unlike any other place I know of out west, the front range area of Colorado seems the spot where modern society begins to clash with the wild west of yesterday, where our cultural mythology tells us the heroes (or anti-heroes, depending on your point-of-view) would bust into the saloon and either challenge someone to a duel or simply shoot up he joint. Based on population alone, one would think more massacres would occur in urban areas simply based on sample size alone … but according to this list it seems all too many of them have happened where the old west and the new west collide.

Few of the liberties guaranteed to Americans in the Bill of Rights are absolute, and the Second Amendment certainly isn’t one of them – we no more have the right to possess rocket launchers than we do have the right to yell fire in a crowded movie theater. But is this the right time to have a national debate about gun control, as Bill Kristol suggests Democrats should do? The AP reports that both Obama and Romney “have softened their positions on gun restrictions over the years.”

Ian Donnis has a fascinating interview with Bob Walsh of NEA-RI on the Rhode Island Public Radion airwaves this morning … here’s his post from Friday, and here’s hoping he posts the audio from the interview too. Walsh says the state got bad legal advice and should have negotiated with unions about pension cuts like Mayor Angel Taveras did in Providence.

Whether or not the state or municipality have been better at funding public schools in Woonsocket, the simple fact is there isn’t enough money there to properly educate the kids. The Projo reports that teachers haven’t gotten raises in four years and we know that property taxes were raised as much as the General Assembly would allow during that time period … so, given that the objective is to educate students not assess blame, what do we do to ensure that Woonsocket students get the education they deserve?

“Take Two Tomatoes and Call Me in the Morning” – ecoRI reports Woonsocket and West Warwick farmers’ markets that are giving .

Interesting, from Barrington Patch: “Michael Messore, Barrington’s new superintendent, is married to the head of the foreign language department at the high school. So, Messore would be directly involved in negotiating a new contract with the teachers’ union that would have an impact on his wife’s compensation.”

It seems to me he should recuse himself from these negotiations. Thoughts commenters?

Anthony DeRose, chairman of the Democratic LGBTQ Caucus, is profiled in GoLocal today … here’s hoping he’s successful in his goals for this election season.

Progress Report: Making Sense of CNBC Report, Education Funding in Woonsocket, Hard Knock Life in Middletown


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Mohegan Bluffs, Block Island (Photo by Bob Plain)

Get ready for the conservative barrage that because Rhode Island ranked as the least business-friendly state we should adjust policy to appease the good editors at CNBC. But before we do, take a look at what CNBC says are the top two states in which to business – Texas and Utah – and the bottom two – Rhode Island and Hawaii. Where would you rather move your business to?

By the way, every northeastern state finished in the bottom half of this list. Conversely, Rhode Island was the only northeastern state not to finish in the top 10 for education.

Speaking of public education, RIDE’s own Jason P. Becker has a great post today filling in for Ted Nesi titled: “Woonsocket, not the state, failed to fund city schools.” He writes that because the state has increased education aid to schools there and the city has decreased funding that it’s Woonsocket’s fault it doesn’t have enough money. If only government were so simple … for at least the past three years, Woonsocket has raised property taxes very close to as much as the state allowed, and during that same period Woonsocket lost out on some $12 million it expected in state aid. I would argue the question is not did the state do more than Woonsocket, the question is did either do enough.

The Projo’s story on a Middletown group home with more than 400 at-risk kids living there that was closed due to conditions the state felt were “not suitable for the children” reads like something out of Dickens, or Annie.

Maryellen Butke’s campaign for state senator has a new advocate: Donna Perry, who is both the executive director of the Rhode Island Statewide Coalition and John DePetro’s sister. I bet she won’t be bragging about that endosement as she door knocks on the East Side.

Nice to see an op/ed by CD-2 congressional candidate Abel Collins on the Journal editorial page today. Some inspiring words: “The biggest obstacle to change is not money, it is cynicism. Did we really fight for nearly two centuries to get access to the ballot box for all just to decide now that voting doesn’t accomplish anything? How would Martin Luther King Jr., Susan B. Anthony, or Thomas Dorr judge the lack of political participation that has come to characterize the U.S.?”

Awesome headline of the day: “House Republicans Spend 89 Hours Trying To Take Away Health Coverage From 30 Million Americans”

CNBC might not like Rhode Island, but Gold Digest does!

Progress Report: Celebrate Homeless Rights, NK Janitors Fired, Govt by Fear in Woonsocket, Public Records


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John Joyce, of the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless, campaigns for the Homeless Bill of Rights during the legislative session. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Come celebrate today at the State House an area of public policy in which Rhode Island is leading the nation: protecting the rights of homeless people. That’s right, as the rest of the nation moves toward outlawing homelessness and sleeping in public places, the Ocean State is the first in the country to pass a homeless bill of rights.

“On the one hand it is a shame that we need a law like this to stop bigotry and discrimination,” said the law’s author, John Joyce, co-founder of the Homeless Advocacy Project who once lived on the streets himself. “But on the other hand it is wonderful that Rhode Island passed this law and took a stand against such discrimination.”

The celebration is at 1:30, and Gov. Chafee will be there.

Speaking of being homeless, a new luxury condo development proposed for a rural area of Barrington could leave the endangered diamondback terrapins that leave nearby without a place to live … it’s high time we decide as a culture that human profit cannot trump the rights of other living things to simply exist.

In North Kingstown, its the school janitors who may end being on the streets, as the School Committee has fired 26 custodial workers and plans to replace them by outsourcing the work to a private company, which says it will hire back the laid-off employees at “the company’s ‘enhanced wage,'” according to North Kingstown Patch. By the way, “enhanced wage” = less health benefits and no collective bargaining rights. This is nothing more union-busting, and the NK School Committee should be ashamed to employ such a tactic.

The MaddowBlog reacts to conservative Woonsocket Rep Jon Brien’s assertion that he didn’t support the supplemental tax bill because it would be easier to win concessions if the situation was more dire. “What the ALEC lawmaker is describing is government by fear. The policy choice is between trying to fix a city by starving it or reinvesting in it.”

Congrats to Rhode Island for finally updating its public records law, and thanks to Common Cause RI for working so hard on its passage … that said, it is patently ridiculous that elected officials emails and other written communications are exempt from the law. This is the exact stuff that should be covered, and we trust that John Marion of Common Cause will be back in the halls of the State House next year fighting for further reform.

Me, Jon Brien Talk ALEC, Woonsocket on WPRO


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I have to hand it to Rep. Jon Brien – while I think his politics are repugnant, he’s always a good sport about answering my questions when I ask him about either his involvement with ALEC or his decision to bring his community to brink of bankruptcy. So last week, when he asked if he could turn the tables on me and interview me when he filled in for Matt Allen on WPRO, it was easy to say yes. Here’s the segment:

We had a great conversation about his role with ALEC, the reasons for and against the failed supplemental property tax for Woonsocket and the recent New York Times op/ed that tied the two together.

In the second hour, we touched upon everything from marriage equality to organized labor and how conservative the General Assembly is … we also took calls that were mostly unsympathetic to my progressive points of view. It makes for some good radio. Here it is:

Thanks Jon Brien, Matt Allen and WPRO … it was a lot of fun!

Chafee Should Veto Woonsocket Cross Bills


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At 2:30 AM on the morning of June 13th, an hour before adjourning for the year, the General Assembly approved two outlandish companion bills, H-8143A and S 3035 as amended. In direct contrast to the principles that animated the founding of our state, these bills establish a government commission with the blatantly inappropriate and unconstitutional role of deciding for religious faiths which symbols of theirs are religious and which ones aren’t. As a long-time and staunch supporter of separation of church and state, Governor Chafee should veto this ill- advised legislation.

The bills were prompted by the on-going controversy surrounding a town-maintained Latin cross in front of a Woonsocket fire station. But whatever one’s views of that monument’s constitutional validity, this legislation crosses a line that the First Amendment cannot tolerate. It not only extensively entangles government in religious matters, it epitomizes the worst fears of the founders of the Constitution, who believed that separation of church and state was needed as much, if not more, to protect religion from the state as to protect the state from religion. This bill would allow government officials to declare that even a sacred religious symbol, icon, inscription, or statue has attained a secular value. Thus, government could attack religion in the guise of protecting it, by degrading, minimizing and politicizing the sacred nature of religious symbols in order to “protect” them from those advocating separation of church and state. No government commission should be permitted to decree that a religious symbol no longer has a religious meaning or that it has become predominantly secular.

Further, rather than resolve disputes over government sponsorship of religious symbols, the establishment of a commission like this will only magnify them and politicize religion to an extremely uncomfortable degree. It is ironic that those who claim a desire to protect religion would promote a bill that essentially gives a state commission the power to strip religious symbols of their sectarian meaning.

Passage of this bill is even more ironic when one considers the attacks that Governor Chafee was subjected to from the right last December when, in line with his Republican predecessor, he referred to the State House “holiday tree” instead of calling it a Christmas tree. Yet many of those same people have rallied around a bill that now establishes a government commission whose stated purpose is to declare religious symbols secular! We are hopeful that Governor Chafee will see this legislation for the politically mischievous and constitutionally problematic bill it is and give it a well-deserved veto.

Sewage Treatment Gets Legislative Treatment


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State House Dome from North Main Street
State House Dome from North Main Street
The State House dome from North Main Street. (Photo by Bob Plain)

In the waning days of the legislative session, can one be forgiven for suspecting that Assembly members don’t give a, well how about a quart of  sewage solids about the municipal governments they represent?  Sewage stories from Woonsocket and Warwick lead one to suspect otherwise.

Woonsocket first. Woonsocket is currently under a DEM order to drive nutrient pollution down beginning in 2013. Nutrient pollution, in the form of nitrates and ammonia, acts as fertilizer for algae blooms that use up oxygen in the water, killing the fish that aren’t driven away. The estimated cost of these improvements is around $35 million.  The system serves Woonsocket, but also some customers in neighboring towns, on either side of the border with Massachusetts.  The estimate is that this will add a couple of hundred dollars to annual sewer bills.

Woonsocket’s now-infamous House delegation, Jon Brien, Robert Phillips, and Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, tried to get the DEM requirement killed during the last legislative session. Unfortunately, DEM is only enforcing a federal EPA requirement, so it’s more complicated than just yelling, “stop.”

Complicating the issue, upstream from Woonsocket, the sewage authority over the line in Massachusetts is suing the EPA over the same rules. The dodge currently preferred by the city of Woonsocket and their House delegation is that Rhode Island wait for the outcome of that suit. Though it might seem to make sense to wait for the suit to settle, similar suits around the country have failed. Besides, clean water is — to most people — a good thing. Might the delegation have proposed helping Woonsocket pay for the sewage treatment upgrades?

Move now to Warwick. The Assembly repealed a law to mandate that homeowners along the new sewer routes hook their houses up to those sewers.  A typical hookup costs $1500-2000, and annual sewer bills are around $450. The mandate is/was part of the Greenwich Bay Special Area Management Plan, a plan to clean Greenwich Bay, once home to a thriving shellfish fishery, and now mostly closed to digging clams.

Governor Chafee vetoed the bill and the Assembly overrode his veto. Another victory for low sewer bills. Except that the finances of the Warwick Sewer Authority have budgeted in a certain number of hookups per year. This is part of how they borrowed the money to fund the expansion in the first place, and how they make their budget each year. Without those new hookups, the people already connected to the sewer will see their rates rise, both according to the financial statements, and to Janine Burke, the Warwick Sewer Authority director, who I spoke to about it.

Alternatively, the Authority has the legal authorization to charge a fee — a “connect-capable” fee of around $200 per year — to the houses along its route that aren’t hooked up. To date it has chosen not to do so (which puts it out of compliance with the Greenwich Bay plan), but it can revisit the issue. At any rate, overriding that veto in order to keep sewer costs down seems like it may be a losing strategy.

What both of these stories say is that the state is interested in seeing cleaner water. The Assembly gave no orders that DEM repudiate the EPA requirements. No one will go on record wanting dirty water and dead fish. They just don’t want to pay for the cleanup.

To a small extent, you have to give the Woonsocket gang of three a little credit for consistency. They don’t think cleaner water is worth spending any money on, and so reject both the money and the requirements, even if they offer lip service to clean water. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt told the Woonsocket Patch:

“I understand it’s important to decrease the pollutants in the water and I also understand that eventually, this must happen. But we can’t possibly move forward with this project at this time and consider ourselves fiscally responsible leaders.”

So their position is clean water, later. The rest of the Assembly seems ok with the idea of clean water now, so long as someone else pays for it. Neither perspective seems worth endorsing to me.

What about the perspective that clean water now is a good thing worth paying for?  It’s a good thing for Woonsocket, but it’s also a good thing for everyone downstream, which means Lincoln, Cumberland, Pawtucket, Central Falls, Providence, and everyone on Narragansett Bay. Untreated sewage currently flows into the water from the Warwick shore, but East Greenwich benefits from a cleaner Greenwich Bay, too. Given all that, why should the state insist that all sewage problems be solved locally?  Yes, Woonsocket residents pay higher property taxes proportional to their ability than nearly any other city or town in the state.  Sewer customers in Providence and Pawtucket have seen their rates climb dramatically in recent years for the same reasons.  Does the state have nothing to offer besides words? How about money?

Let’s end with a riddle. In 2010, our state’s economy, measured by the gross state product, was about $49.2 billion dollars. Corrected for inflation, this is larger than it has ever been in our little state’s history, despite our monumental unemployment rate. There are those who say that our economic growth is because of the dramatic drop in tax revenue over the past decades. That’s silly because growth has slowed or stalled as taxes have been cut. But slow growth or fast, the economy now is bigger than ever.

So remember, when you hear about how we can no longer afford clean water or good education or comfortable retirements — let alone find enough jobs for everyone — that our state is collectively richer now than it has ever been before. Ever. Feel better now?

Forget Model Bills, It’s About the ALEC Mindset


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It’s great to have the conversation turned toward the conservative forces at play in Woonsocket, but it’s unfortunate that the concern seems to be getting lost in a search for something that doesn’t exist: secret ALEC model legislation that tells its members what to do when their city has a choice between bankruptcy and raising taxes.

Joe Nocera’s piece on ALEC in Woonsocket wasn’t about direct links, it was about what ALEC’s ideas on municipal government look like when applied to a financially struggling city. “It’s not pretty,” he concluded.

Besides, model legislation may be useful but in a way ALEC’s ideology has already gone viral.

This is how the New York Times reported on this pretty recent phenomenon in April:

“Most of the attention has focused on ALEC’s role in creating model bills, drafted by lobbyists and lawmakers, that broadly advance a pro-business, socially conservative agenda. But a review of internal ALEC documents shows that this is only one facet of a sophisticated operation for shaping public policy at a state-by-state level. The records offer a glimpse of how special interests effectively turn ALEC’s lawmaker members into stealth lobbyists, providing them with talking points, signaling how they should vote and collaborating on bills affecting hundreds of issues like school vouchers and tobacco taxes.”

Of course, ALEC has no blueprint on what to do when a city goes through what Woonsocket is going through. No city has ever gone through what Woonsocket is going through: the General Assembly, specifically the House, prevented the elected city council and mayor from raising revenue enough to avoid insolvency at the behest of three local legislators because they preferred receivership to taxes. There’s no model legislation for that.

But make no mistake about it, Brien’s policy positions for his hometown are tailored perfectly to how his fellow ALEC board members would want him to handle the situation. His stock in the far-right, anti-government group will surely skyrocket if the Woonsocket budget crisis is balanced on the backs of public sector retirees rather than private property owners. He’ll be the star of the conference in Salt Lake City this summer. Maybe Baldelli-Hunt will go too, she’s also an ALEC member.

Brien said he hasn’t been in touch with anyone from the organization since he attended a conference in May. He didn’t need to be. He implemented perfectly the broad brush ALEC game plan: fight taxes, shrink government and bust unions.

That may be why Times columnist Joe Nocera talks about the “ALEC philosophy” rather than the ALEC smoking gun. Nocera certainly didn’t blame ALEC for Woonsocket’s woes, as Ted Nesi reported. And while playing the ALEC card might sound unseemly when one words it as such, it is altogether fair in this instance. There is, as I wrote in my piece, “enough circumstantial evidence to at least raise the question.”

Ian Donnis makes an important point here: “Brien makes no bones about identifying with ALEC’s ‘free markets, low taxes’ philosophy; he says his constituents support the same values.”

There is no doubt Woonsocket is an ALEC-friendly place. There is a local small government group that’s been active the past several years called the Woonsocket Taxpayer Coalition, that adheres to the same low tax/small government values as does ALEC.  And, indeed, ALEC has long had ties to the community. CVS is the only Rhode Island company that is a member of ALEC. And Brien said he got involved with ALEC through former Woonsocket legislative leader Jerry Martineau, who used to be the state ALEC chair in the 1990’s.

“Jerry and I have always been friends,” Brien told me in April. “I wanted to pick up that mantle.”

Brien now owns the ALEC mantle. He should do so for better or worse.

NY Times Links ALEC to Woonsocket Fiscal Crisis


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Sometimes it takes a view from 20,000 feet rather than in the trenches to see the big picture. Such may be the case with today’s New York Times, which makes the connection between the budget crisis in Woonsocket and Rep. Jon Brien’s involvement with the American Legislative Exchange Council.

ALEC, reports Times columnist and native Rhode Islander Joe Nocera, “has a very clear agenda for dealing with state budgets. It wants to shrink them. Although Brien has denied that he is applying the ALEC philosophy to his small city, it looks, in fact, as if that’s exactly what he is doing. It’s not pretty.”

Nocera says the Woonsocket House delegation is using the fiscal crisis as an opportunity to shrink government. He even calls it the “ALEC philosophy.”

Brien denies the charge, of course. It’s a point he is incredibly sensitive about.

When I recently wrote that the “General Assembly ought to save Woonsocket from its elected officials” prior to its last chance of the year to approve the supplemental tax bill, he laughed it off. But when I tweeted this that night, he took great offense, immediately leaving his seat on the House floor and coming up to literally yell at me while I sat at the press booth.

Similarly, a week earlier, when I tweeted this and this, Brien demanded a retraction:

While many have speculated that the Woonsocket House delegation’s decision not to support the supplemental tax bill had to do with Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt coveting the mayor’s office, it could have more to do with Brien’s idealogical adherence to the ALEC game plan.

He’s brand new to the once-shadowy, ultra-conservative organization’s board of directors (RI Future broke this story) and had just recently come home from his first ALEC meeting as a member of leadership when the Woonsocket House delegation launched its effort to sink the supplemental tax. If Brien and the rest of the Woonsocket House delegation didn’t see the crisis in Woonsocket as an opportunity to implement the ALEC agenda locally, I’m sure his colleagues on the board of directors wish that he had.

There’s certainly enough circumstantial evidence to at least raise the question.

Initially, Brien suggested borrowing from the city pension fund to close the budget gap – a move that certainly would have created a pension crisis where none exists today. On one hand this may seem like robbing Peter to pay Paul, but it’s not. Every Rhode Islander understands that if the problem lies with pensions, we can simply slash those pensions, though we would never treat taxpayers this way. If it hurts organized labor, and you’re an anti-union ALEC conservative, all the better.

Also, the Woonsocket delegation did little to advocate for more education funding money for their struggling city, even though the school department is currently suing the state saying they aren’t paying up quick enough. But instead Brien lobbied hard for Gov. Chafee’s municipal aid package, which would have helped cities like Woonsocket in that it would have eroded collective bargaining rights.

The now-infamous Woonsocket trio of Brien, Baldelli-Hunt and Phillips also tried to kill a federally-mandated sewage treatment plant when they were negotiating with the governor’s office about the supplemental tax. Not only would it have shrunk government, but it would have done so in a way that would have relegated a pesky environment-protecting project mandated by the EPA and the Clean Water Act to the back burner – talk about an ALEC home run!

ALEC experts from Washington DC have cautioned me against looking for fingerprints left by the far-right organization. Since garnering so much bad press recently, they said, ALEC has adapted and learned to operate without leaving a trail. To that end, it’s at the very least worth exploring.

If Nocera is correct, and the Woonsocket House delegation didn’t support the supplemental tax as a way to implement ALEC’s dreams of a smaller government, then this picture I took of Baldelli-Hunt talking to the media as Brien looks on during the last night of session certainly captures that story:

In Woonsocket, Two Briens Saw Tax Bill Differently


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The story in Woonsocket just keeps getting weirder. First the House delegation overrode the will of the mayor and city council by not supporting a supplemental tax bill at the State House last week. Then, today, a member of that city council – one who supported the tax increase, no less – has called for the resignation of the state official who tried to negotiate a deal with the delegation for the tax.

And, oh yeah, they are also father and son.

Woonsocket City Councilor Albert Brien, who voted for the supplemental tax increase at the city-level, is the father of Rep. Jon Brien, the legislator who killed it at the state level. Today, Albert called for the resignation of Rosemary Booth-Gallogly, the governor’s fiscal adviser who negotiated with the delegation late into the last night of the session, for saying in a press release after talks stalled that his son – and the rest of the delegation – let down local residents.

“It’s very simple,” Albert Brien told me. “If anyone has failed the city it has not been the delegation, it has been the state.”

He said Booth-Gallogly and state Auditor Dennis Hoyle specifically failed Woonsocket by not overseeing bond criteria was met after its issuance. In general, he added, that the state has failed Woonsocket by not properly funding education.

Albert Brien did so, first reported by the Valley Breeze, as a member of the Woonsocket Taxpayers Coalition, a group that advocates for lower property taxes locally. While Albert is a member, son Jon is not.

“It’s more of a citizen thing,” Rep. Jon Brien said. His father stepped down from the group’s executive board when he was elected to the city council but remained a member.

Both father and son say they are the rare breed of staunchly fiscally conservative Democrats that seems only to exist in norther Rhode Island communities like Woonsocket.

“Socially, I’m liberal, and fiscally I’m conservative,” Albert said.  He said such a platform is not such a strange phenomenon in Woonsocket. Jon is one of the most conservative members of the General Assembly.

Albert Brien actually beat out his son’s wife Stella Brien for a seat on the city council, and she used to hold his seat in the legislature.

Although they often agree politically, they don’t always such as was the case on the supplemental tax bill.

“We disagree all the time,” Albert Brien said. “He does his thing and I do mine. Last year I had a Cicilline sign on my lawn and he had a Loughlin sign on his.”

Progress Report: Woonsocket, Global Warming in RI, Little Money for Low-Income Housing, RIP Rodney King


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The Woonsocket City Council meets tonight to work on the spending plan it must send to the state-appointed budget commission prior to July 1. The two entities have about two weeks to shave about $6 million from city expenses … if they can’t do it the next option would likely be a receiver.

Not only do we have one of the worst economies in the country, we also seem to suffer the most from the effects of global warming. Remember this when temperatures climb into the high 90’s this week … no state is getting hotter faster than Rhode Island.

And yet another way the state is failing: Rhode Island remains one of a handful of states without a permanent stream of money for low-income housing, something state officials and homeless advocates say is a critical part of implementing a homeless prevention plan adopted by the state earlier this year.”

Rest in peace Rodney King, whose brutal beating by the LA Police in 1991 ended the the Cosby Show era of race relations in the United States … he also raised the most important question of a generation when he famously said during the 1992 LA riots after police were aquitted, “Can we all get along?”

The answer to his question is because of people like Sheriff Joe Arpaio.

The Projo lauds state Sen. Dawson Hodgson for making it to an East Greenwich fundraiser when the Senate was in recess on the last night of the legislative session … me too, considering the event was organized by my brother Matt Plain. While Mattie and me have pretty much never agreed on anything political in our lives, the rest of our family is as bipartisan as they come – our sister, mom and step-dad all attended both the RI Future/Working RI Netroots cocktail party just a few nights before they attended the Hodgson fundraiser.

How Woonsocket Ended Up in Fiscal Trouble


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In the proposed budget Woonsocket advertised to its citizens, the city says it expects to spend $122,095,051. But the actual number, said Budget Commission Chair Bill Sequino, will likely be at least $6 or 7 million more than that because of a deficit on the school side of the ledger that was just discovered several months ago.

“We know the ad is inaccurate,” said Sequino, noting that his budget commission and the town council have until July 1 to make the numbers work. “At some point there could be some draconian cuts.”

He said people have talked about lay-offs, pension cuts and across the board pay cuts.

While whatever cuts occur will likely affect the entire city, the deficits are on the school side of the ledger.

“On the city side, they may not have been okay by much,” said Sequino, “but they were in the black.”

In last year’s budget, the school district planned to spend about $59 million. Sequino and others expect they will spend closer to $66 million, if not more.

How the schools ended up spending so much more than they expected is a question Sequino said the budget commission is eagerly anticipating an answer to.

Property taxes were kept low in Woonsocket when Susan Menard was mayor and state aid was plentiful. Then, according to Woonsocket teachers’ union president Jeffrey Partington, then-Governor Don Carcieri threw a money-wrench into the system.

“He gave a tax break to everyone making more than $250,000 and off-set that by taking money away from cities and towns,” Partington said.

Since then, according to information from current-Gov. Linc Chafee, who has recently railed against Carcieri cutting money to struggling cities, Woonsocket has lost out on some $12 million.

For the past several years, the city has been raising property taxes at or close to the maximum amount allowed under state law, but it wasn’t enough to make up for the loss from the state. Meanwhile, the schools kept expecting more education aid from the state. They’ll get an additional $6 million under the new funding formula that goes into effect this year, but the additional money isn’t expected to be fully phased in for at least another seven budget cycles. Woonsocket and Pawtucket are currently suing the state saying that isn’t soon enough.

Partington said the schools initially used ARRA funds to mask the ensuing deficits. This proved to exacerbate the problem.

“We were running expenses higher but we didn’t know it yet,” he said.

In 2011, the town council called for an audit of the school department’s budget and investigators identified a $2.7 million hole.

The newly-hired business manager Stacey Busby convinced the council auditors were seeing something that didn’t exist. But a closer look this year proved her wrong, and the deficit was said to be as high as $7.3 million. In March, the she was fired though the school committee voted against pursuing a criminal investigation.

“I guess she misrepresented what was there,” Partington said. “Everyone is interested in having a balanced budget. Sometimes you just put something down and pray it works out.”

RIDE: Woonsocket School Takeover Not Imminent


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“There’s a lot of legal steps that we would have to go through” before the state department of education would take control of the school system in Woonsocket, said RIDE spokesman Elliot Krieger this morning.

“There has to be a determination that there is a fiscal crisis,” he said. “We would not be the agency to do that.”

Krieger added, “It’s a pretty extreme step. But the state has gone that route before.”

In the early 1990’s, responding a fiscal crisis in the Central Falls school system, the legislature passed a law that allowed for the department of education to take over funding and management of the schools there. In that instance, Central Falls – like Woonosocket did last night – asked the state for help.

Below is the state law that would determine how – and if – a state take over would happen. It says a school committee “may … request the department of elementary and secondary education to assume the supervision, control, and management of the public schools. Upon receiving the request the department, if it is satisfied that the request is warranted and that the best interests of the public schools would be served, may assume supervision, control, and management.”

16-1-10  Assumption of control of city or town schools by department – School lunch program. – (a) The school committee of any city or town in which the taxable property is not adequate, at the average rate of taxation for public school support throughout the state, to provide with the money that may be apportioned from the general treasury an amount sufficient to provide and maintain public schools of a high standard, may at a regular meeting held before the first day of July in any year request the department of elementary and secondary education to assume the supervision, control, and management of the public schools of the city or town for the ensuing year; provided that the city or town has appropriated for the support of public schools for the year a sum equivalent to thirty cents (30¢) on each one hundred dollars ($100) of the assessed valuation of the city or town. Upon receiving the request the department, if it is satisfied that the request is warranted and that the best interests of the public schools would be served, may assume supervision, control, and management.

Krieger said Education Commissioner Deborah Gist has been in touch with Woonsocket officials and RIDE’s finance director has spoken with the state-appointed budget commission.

“There are other things we can do to provide help and assistance,” Krieger said, “like helping to design a budget. It’s not like there is a pot of money but we do have some expertise and technical support.”

 

 

 

Progress Report: Woonsocket Asks State To Take Over Local Education, Pot Decrim, So Long Bob Watson


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Forget receivership – for now, anyway – the Woonsocket School Committee has another idea to solve the struggling city’s budget crisis. The school committee last night voted 4 to 1 to have the state take over the local schools. More later this morning on what happens next.

The Projo has two great pieces of journalism on Woonsocket today … one is a profile of the now-infamous Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt (link not available from Projo) and another on how the local talk radio network factors into Woonsocket politics.

Ted Nesi falls into the old trap of tacitly blaming municipal financial issues on employee benefit packages. He rightly points out that the city failed to put some $6 million into its pension fund since 2008, but neglects to mention that during that same time period Woonsocket lost more than $12 million in state aid.

That said, Woonsocket’s main fiscal problem is a $10 million school deficit, ostensibly a result of bad book keeping by management. But watch how hard the media and others try to pin the problem on public sector unions … maybe Tim White can even find a lazy city employee to follow around.

For the time being, though, Woonsocket teachers won’t lose their jobs. But definitely stay tuned…

Rhode Island is now the 15th state to decriminalize possession of less than an ounce of pot, a move that will save tens of millions of dollars.

No one made covering the State House more entertaining than Bob Watson. He will be missed…

One question every reporter in Rhode Island should be asking: how did Bank RI make a loan to 38 Studios based on collateral that didn’t exist yet.

Johnson & Johnson is dropping out of ALEC, joining Walmart, Coke, Pepsi and the Bill and Melina Gates Foundation and about 20 other well-known major corporations.

Need a little summer? Then watch this video of a deer smelling me I got last night where the Maskerchugg River flows into Greenwich Cove:

Woonsocket Schools Consider State Takeover


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One way Woonsocket could help fix its budget deficit will be discussed at the school committee meeting here tonight. School Committee President Anita McGuire-Forcier said she put an item on the agenda that would ask the state to take over the local public schools as it did with Central Falls in the early 1990’s.

“We’re asking the state for help,” she said after leaving a meeting of the state-appointed budget commission. “They left us in this mess they should help us out of it.”

Woonsocket schools have a $10 million deficit this year, which is a major reason the city may need to file for receivership. The school budget is about $60 million annually.

McGuire-Forcier said the state has short-changed Woonsocket on the amount of education aid it gave the struggling city in its previous aid formula. While the department of education has agreed to pay Woonsocket the difference, it wants to do so over the next 7 to 10 years. Woonsocket and Pawtucket are suing RIDE saying it needs to pay up sooner than that.

She also said the state is hurting all urban areas with cuts to municipalities.

“When you do across the board cuts to state aid it doesn’t hurt the suburban districts but it really hurts the urbans,” she said. “They are turning us into ghettos.”

The School Committee will consider the proposal tonight at its meeting.

House Now Owns Woonsocket’s Budget


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Rhode Island enters strange new anti-tax territory with the House of Representatives’s decision not to pass a bill that would have raised property taxes for Woonsocket residents.

The tax hike was heavy, but necessary for the financially struggling city to avoid financial ruin. Instead, teachers and police officers will likely lose their jobs, vendors won’t get paid and the city will likely need a receiver.

But, alas, all that has already become the narrative of Rhode Island – cash-strapped city can’t pay its bills so contracts are broken and working class public sector employees and retirees get stuck with the bills. The strange new world is the General Assembly chose this path for Woonsocket.

Woonsocket’s mayor and council made the tough vote to ask the legislature for permission to raise property taxes beyond the cap the legislature put on it. And Gov. Chafee and his staff lobbied leadership hard to approve of the increase.

The House of Representatives was unwilling the increase taxes as a way for the city to pay its debts. And the road to receivership was paved by Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, Jon Brien and Bob Phillips – whose kamikaze tact of taking the city towards bankruptcy may prove the worst thing to ever happen to the city.

But the rest of the House of Representatives had every right – if not an obligation – to save Woonsocket from this potentially perilous gamble its politicians are playing.

Don’t look to Woonsocket Senator Roger Picard for blame – like the mayor and city council, he supported the tax as a last ditch effort to avoid receivership. He also didn’t sign on to a letter other members of the delegation sent to the governor’s office and legislative leadership earlier in the session that stated a preference for a receiver.

“It’s a philosophical disagreement,” he said. “When you have appointed commissions or receivers they don’t have the same type of investment that an elected official does.”

House Speaker Gordon Fox kept on the table the option of voting the tax hike through without the locals support. But in the end, even though the sharpest municipal finance experts in the state as well as the people elected to make such decisions for the city felt appropriate, it was deemed an unpalatable option politically. No one wanted to go into the election season having raised taxes on another city.

So instead of owning Woonsocket’s tax increases, Brien, Baldelli-Hunt, Phillips and the entire House of Representatives instead will own its insolvency.

Woonsocket Tax Fails, City Likely to Seek Receiver


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After a marathon 12-hour meeting on the last night of the legislative session, during which the Woonsocket delegation almost continually met with House leadership and representatives of the governor’s office, the General Assembly chose not to move on a supplemental tax bill that was widely expected – or at least hoped – would have saved the struggling city from going into receivership.

At one part during the long night, Rep. Jon Brien brought to Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt and Bob Phillips a deal that would have imposed a 8.5 percent tax increase and would have delayed the construction of a sewage treatment plant in town, Brien said, but because it would have added the tax increase to next year’s base, the delegation didn’t support it as a group.

“I was negotiating right up until the 13th hour,” Rep. Jon Brien said as the session came to a close at 3:30 a.m. “In the end they decided nothing was better than something.”

The governor’s office disagreed. In a statement delivered to reporters just after Brien’s statements, Rosemary Booth Gallogly, said, “Representatives Baldelli-Hunt, Brien and Phillips have done their city and their constituents no favors by failing to agree to what is necessary to begin to take steps to truly address the significant challenges facing Woonsocket.”

She said the legislators was making demands that were beyond the scope of the governor’s office at this point in the session – “a fact they were well aware of.”

Earlier in the evening, the delegation had five demands – which also included removing the mayor and city council members from the budget commission – but after Director of Revenue Rosemary Booth Gallogly made a public statement to reporters that the governor’s office would not support that, they amended it to just the two demands. The sticking point, said several familair with the situation, was that the tax increase would be added to the base and not be just a one time fix.

The state-appointed budget commission meets today at 3 p.m. Commission Chair Bill Sequino said Tuesday that the city would likely need the supplemental tax in order to avoid going into receivership.

“If there is no supplemental tax increase you have to wonder if there is anything we can do at all,” he said. “At that point, a receiver would have a lot more authority.”

On May 22, both Baldelli-Hunt and Brien said they preferred a receiver to a budget commission.

“A receiver has the leverage to make the adjustments that need to be made,” Baldelli-Hunt said after addressing the House Finance Committee about the supplemental tax increase. “I don’t want a supplemental tax bill to stand in the way of getting a solid plan in place.”

Brien added, “I think a receiver is ultimately what we need to do.”

On the same day, Baldelli-Hunt said her position on the city’s finances is unrelated to speculation that she would like to run for mayor, saying, “This has nothing to do with politics.”

THere are hundreds of homes up for tax

 


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